Skip to content
  • X

Subscribe

Magazine | Newsletters
  • Food & Drink
  • News
  • Culture
  • Style
  • Home
  • Family
  • Wellness
  • Things to Do
  • Travel
  • Best of NoVA
  • Best Restaurants
  • Most Influential
  • Top High Schools
  • In This Issue
  • Home
    • Home
  • How to Inject Bold Color into Your Home
  • Home

How to Inject Bold Color into Your Home

Vibrant hues are here to stay. Designers share ideas on how to incorporate color into your home.

By Charlotte Safavi July 14, 2023 at 12:12 pm

What better way to brighten up a room than with a splash of vibrant color? In this Home Tour, take a peek into three different spaces as designers share ideas on how to incorporate bright hues into your home.

Hygge Hues

Coziness is the feel Nicole Lanteri wanted to create for a couple with two young children who live in a row house.

“Our overall design was driven by the desire to create a sense of hygge in this home, creating cozy nooks for the family to gather in this first-floor living space,” says Lanteri of Washington, DC–based Nicole Lanteri Interiors. “We love color for the energy, warmth, and personalization it provides to a space.”

When the homeowners purchased the house in 2022, it was a run-of-the-mill renovated row house doused in gray. High on the homeowners’ wish list, in addition to adding vibrance and personality, was to have Lanteri install a long bench seat in the front window and create a functional drop-off entry area for the family because the home does not have a foyer.

Photo by Robert Radifera for Stylish Productions

“My husband is Swedish and has fallen in love with the Stockholm-based design shop Svenskt Tenn. My only request to Nicole was to find something from it for the living area. I thought I’d end up with a lampshade,” the homeowner says.

Lanteri kicked the request up a notch and found a whimsical Svenskt Tenn wallpaper with a spring-inspired floral pattern where blues, corals, pinks, and yellows pop from a dark neutral background. She paired it with custom grid-patterned wainscoting in teal and a 14-foot built-in bench with storage below. The dining room adjacent to the neutral kitchen is saturated in blue.

“In general, we knew our clients love blues and greens, so we went with that as a starting point. But we always strive to add balance between the warm and cool tones, hence our coral and blush rug, and, of course, the multicolored wallpaper,” says Lanteri.

A sectional in the main sitting area serves to create the sense of an entry hall. Behind it, there’s a bench, peg board, and colorful rug where the family can take off their shoes and jackets as they come in the front door.

bathroom with black tile and green floral wallpaper
The wallpaper is by Oscar de la Renta for Kravet. (Photo by Robert Radifera for Stylish Productions)

One of the best spaces in the home, where many homeowners are willing to take a risk, is the powder room.

“We created a jewel of a space with simple subway tile, with white grout, and a fun greenery-inspired wallpaper. It’s a space that now sings,” says Lanteri.

White living room with orange accents
Pops of orange enliven the TV room. The dragon pillows that pull the overall palette together are by Schumacher in the Chiang Mai Dragon pattern. (Photo by Robert Radifera for Stylish Productions)

Orange Crush

“We were lucky our client had an amazing sense of style and a love of bold color,” says Waterlily Interiors designer Tracy Schlegel about a design refresh project she undertook with her business partner and sister, Kelcey Huff.

Julia Docking and her husband, Tim, have lived in their home for 18 years, raising three kids. With the last off to college, the empty nesters wanted their main level remodeled one room at a time.

“We wanted our home to be beautiful, modern, and uncluttered, with unique, fun spaces for all kinds of occasions,” says Julia. “Orange makes me happy, so that was on my wish list.”

Schlegel says her client is “all about orange. Orange in every shade: satsuma, paprika, saffron, mango, and persimmon.”

orange chair in living room
A cozy armchair in orange adds extra seating in the TV room. (Photo by Robert Radifera for Stylish Productions)

In the living room, which was rarely used because it lacked adequate seating, the designers painted the walls with Benjamin Moore’s Narragansett Green HC-157, which reads like a blackened teal. They added a roomy tufted, cream-colored Chesterfield sectional. In addition to the L-shaped seating with chrome nailhead trim, two rounded swivel armchairs and a pair of ottomans in patterned textiles bring cool blues and warmer tones into the color mix. But it’s the orange throw pillows that make the space shine.

“In this room, we dialed back the overall color to make the orange pop. The multicolored patterns and contrasting deep hues also balance the intensity of the orange,” says Huff.

bathroom with orange wallpaper
The powder room features Great Wall Bright Persimmon wallpaper by Phillip Jeffries. (Photo by Robert Radifera for Stylish Productions)

In the powder room, the sisters went all out with metallic wallpaper in persimmon orange. In the dining room, which features moss green upholstered armless chairs and a neutral forest-patterned wallpaper, a coral-pink orange shows up sparingly in the graphic of the curtain panels.

“There is a painting in my dining room by an artist from my hometown in Canada that also inspires me,” says Julia. “It’s full of color and surprises. Every time I look at it, I notice something new.”

What is always there are the hues used throughout the home’s palette: teal, blue, green, orange, and purple. Grays and creams are the neutrals.

“We think color adds the character that makes a house a home,” says Schlegel. To which Huff adds, “Don’t be afraid of it. If it makes you happy, you’ll love it in your home.”

living room with white couch and yellow curtains
A mix of solid and patterned pilows by Fabricut layer the Kincaid Furniture sofa. The dark blue table lamps are by Uttermost. (Photo by Robert Radifera for Stylish Productions)

Autumnal Vibe

Sometimes it’s hard to shift out of neutral, but Leesburg-based interior designers Michelle and Catherine Troxell, a mother-daughter team at Grace Thomas Designs, found a way to make color work in this once-neutral Arlington home.

The 1920s Sears bungalow, which had an addition built in 2018, is home to a professional couple and their Goldendoodle. The remodeled space features a living room, kitchen and eat-in nook, and a great room accessed through a custom live-edge barn door. The great room is divided into seating and dining areas and works beautifully for entertaining guests.

“During our design consult with Michelle and Catherine, ‘green velvet’ popped out of my mouth, from where, for what — [I have] no idea, but the team ran with that and built our room schemes around it,” the client says.

white living room with yellow curtains
Photo by Robert Radifera for Stylish Productions

Starting with the front living room, the vision evolved from an emerald green to a forest green. That turned the color story from jewel to autumn throughout the main floor, which features a range of soft greige neutrals and buttery caramel hues. Pops of additional color include slate blues and deep ochres. The palette works beautifully with the home’s vintage vibe.

“The majority of the main floor is open plan with reclaimed hardwood flooring. We wanted a cohesive design that felt comfortable, soft, and welcoming throughout the rooms,” the homeowner says.

In the living room, a pair of textured dark green porcelain lamps sits on either side of the sofa; the hue is also picked up in the contrasting thread on the sofa’s embroidered cream throw pillows.

“We balanced out the green sofa with a pair of neutral leather chairs,” says Catherine. “Though the color defines the feel of the room, we wanted it to be sparing elsewhere, for balance.”

gray chests by window
The gray chest is by Four Hands. Custom curtains use a Greenhouse Fabrics textile. (Photo by Robert Radifera for Stylish Productions)

In the adjacent great room, dining room chairs upholstered in a slate blue textile define that space, and the wall art diptych incorporates all the colors, including the rich ochre that picks up steam in the sitting space.

“Again, the neutral ground or base, the sectional, and carpet in this case, allowed us to go with a bolder color in the drapery, making a statement,” says Catherine. “The throw pillows gave us another opportunity to build on our color story and bring in the blues to this part of the room.”

Feature image by Robert Radifera for Stylish Productions)

This story originally ran in our July issue. For more stories like this, subscribe to Northern Virginia Magazine’s Home newsletter.

Charlotte Safavi

Charlotte Safavi

Contributing Writer

Born in London, England, and educated at Oxford University, Charlotte Safavi began her career as a film and television literary agent, representing screenwriters. After saying goodbye to Hollywood, she developed a thriving freelance career as a shelter magazine writer, producer, and stylist. Throughout the years, her work has appeared in a wide range of local, regional and national publications, including Better Homes & Gardens, Traditional Home, Southern Living, HGTV Magazine and House Beautiful. She also co-owns a photography business, Stylish Productions, which specializes in creating magazine-quality imagery for architects, builders and interior designers. She has happily lived in Alexandria, for the past twenty years with her husband and son.

  • Email
  • Instagram

Trending in NoVA

These New Virginia Laws Go Into Effect July 1, 2026

7 Virginia Universities Ranked World Best in 2026-2027 List

9 New Ice Cream Shops in Northern Virginia

Peek Inside the New Ikea at the Former Dulles Expo Center

22 Fourth of July Fireworks Shows Set to Light Up the Night Sky in Northern Virginia

things to do newsletter

Our Top Stories In Your Inbox

Our newsletters delivered weekly.

Subscribe

Feeds

RSS Feed Follow in Feedly

You May Also Like

Music room with guitars on wall

A Home Renovation Gave this Vienna House a Modern Look and a New Music Room

After photo, exterior of Alexandria home

Before and After: See How Designers Reimagined This Midcentury-Modern Alexandria Home

The 2027 Best Home Experts Poll Is Now Open

  • X

Company

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Writer’s Guidelines
  • Internships
  • Terms of Use

Magazine

  • Magazine
  • Subscription
  • Newsletter
  • Back Issues

Talk to Us

  • Contact Us
  • Submit an Event
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Shopping

  • Subscription
  • Back Issues
  • Plaques
  • Realtor Client Gift Subscriptions

On Newsstands Now

June 2026 best of nova cover

Copyright © 2026 Northern Virginia Magazine

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Hey AI.